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carbon dioxide is used in the Calvin cycle.
Carbon dioxide (CO2).
during Calvin Benson cycle carbon dioxide from the air is used to produce glucose and other compounds.
Calvin Cycle
PGAL
carbon dioxide is used in the Calvin cycle.
Carbon dioxide (CO2).
during Calvin Benson cycle carbon dioxide from the air is used to produce glucose and other compounds.
the final product of the calvin benson cycle used to produce glucose is?
Calvin Cycle
PGAL
Carbon dioxide doesn't form in the Calvin Cycle (I assume you're referring that because there isn't such a thing as the "Calving Cycle" in biochemistry. Carbon dioxide must be taken in by the plant via the stomata and it is then used by the plant in photosynthesis. Clearly, this is why plants rely on carbon dioxide to complete the Calvin cycle and in large, photosynthesis. ~ nkindianhobo ~
carbon dioxide from the air is used to produce glucose and other compounds.
The Calvin cycle is called such because every process produces something that the next process needs, right back to the original step. Carbon fixation produces the molecules needed for reduction, which produces the molecules needed for the regeneration of ribulose, which produces what's needed for carbon fixation.
You phosphorylate glycerol-3-phosphate (all 5 G3P ) with three ATP and you get ribulose bisphosphate, RuBP, and begin the Calvin cycle again
The materials that are needed in the Calvin Cycle are ATP (Adenosine TriPhospate) and Carbon Dioxide
no, sunlight is used in photosysthesis which processes materials to be used in the calvin cycle